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I'm trying to figure out how I can open a ps1 script (or any file) in PS ISE by using the $psISE object.

How can I open a document tab in PS ISE from the command line in PS ISE itself (without using File > Open)?

1
  • It's worth noting that in Windows 2008 R2 the PowerShell ISE is an OS Feature that needs to be installed through Server Manager, it isn't installed by default. It is installed by default in Windows Server 2012, but since I didn't find this information in other related threads I think it is worth mentioning here.
    – Ejoso
    Sep 30, 2014 at 1:55

5 Answers 5

54

psEdit filename

0
11

PowerShell 2.0 in Windows 7, PSEdit does not work. Use "ise", which is an alias for powershell_ise.exe.

ex. ise .\myscript.ps1
2
  • +1 When working in the standard PS console, this is the way to open a file in the ISE. Jan 26, 2013 at 18:02
  • What is ex. Here?
    – Timo
    Dec 17, 2020 at 7:51
8

New tab:
$tab = $psISE.PowerShellTabs.Add()

Load script file to new tab:
$tab.Files.Add("full_path_to_script_file.ps1")

5

Programmatically, this works:

$psISE.CurrentPowerShellTab.Files.Add("$pwd\foo.ps1")

Which is essentially what the PSEdit function uses. To see this execute:

Get-Command PSEdit | Format-List *
5

I took the psedit command and allowed input from the pipeline

Function psedit {
param(
[Parameter(Mandatory=$true,ValueFromPipeline=$true)]$filenames)
foreach ($filename in $filenames)
    {
        dir $filename | where {!$_.PSIsContainer} | %{
            $psISE.CurrentPowerShellTab.Files.Add($_.FullName) > $null
        }
 }     
 }

This allows me to something like this

7 >  ls test*.ps1 | psedit

I find this useful when working on modules and I have several scripts in a directory

Andy

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